Tennis Elbow?

I tore something in my forearm elbow last summer, I blame it on every day archery practice and the the handheld release (Stan Onnex) I was using. I go back/forth to an index finger release and that makes a huge difference using different muscels to avoid irritating the damaged area. As I was nursing the forearm and elbow I ended up tearing the front of my shoulder doing incline butterfly lifts, I kept pushing for a few weeks before I accepted that I had done serious damage to my shoulder/rotator cuff????

So I got off the weights and drawing my compound bow for 30 days (all of January) thinking for sure all would heal and I'd be back at it 100%............... Negative. Here it is March and I've found a stretching/excerise routine and learned what not to do with every day tasks to irritate the elbow and shoulder, advil works well. I hate taking pills (even advil/asprin) and dont want to go under the knife, but am getting closer every day to scheduling an MRI.

Everyone and every situation is different, imo if you find the right orthopedic doctor with a good amount of experience and references it could be benifica. My wife had rotator cuff surgery, it was an outpatient operation (scoped) and shes money now. I'm a procrastinator and stubborn but........... if 6+ months of pain doesn't tell you to get that MRI then eat it like that 2024 Eastern Idaho deer tag.
 
I haven't played tennis in 45 years but I get it occasionally, mostly from chopping too much kindling at once. Now I regulate that. The arm band with the small pressure thing helps greatly for me. I also have not played golf in 25 years but get "golf elbow" now and again. That's the pain in the inner side of the elbow on the bony knob. There seems to be no treatment for that.
 
Your a warrior @manitou1 ! I gotta laugh at the thought of running around like a t-rex for 3 days, hopefully the kidney stones didnt occur during that time.

I've had shoulder and elbow pain for +-6 months and as much as it hurts I'm still shooting the compound daily.
Yeah, having t-rex arms after going poo poses quite the dilemma. Thought I was going to have to do the "carpet scoot" like a dog, lol.

Thankfully no stones during the t-rex chapter. .. and not all came at once or I believe it would have killed me. 🥴

I used to snack on nuts a LOT. Loved spinach too. No doctor ever questioned my diet, but after researching I discovered that almonds and peanuts cause kidney stones... spinach as well.

Eating healthy is baaad!😁
 
I haven't played tennis in 45 years but I get it occasionally, mostly from chopping too much kindling at once. Now I regulate that. The arm band with the small pressure thing helps greatly for me. I also have not played golf in 25 years but get "golf elbow" now and again. That's the pain in the inner side of the elbow on the bony knob. There seems to be no treatment for that.
Yeah, I get golfer's elbow if curling a lot of weight (for me). Hurts pretty bad.
I feel for ya
 
I used to snack on nuts a LOT. Loved spinach too. No doctor ever questioned my diet, but after researching I discovered that almonds and peanuts cause kidney stones... spinach as well.

Eating healthy is baaad!

I eat almonds almost daily as a snack. now you have me worried that kidney stones are in my future...

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I eat almonds almost daily as a snack. now you have me worried that kidney stones are in my future...

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Ha, my old boss called me into his office to ask about the stones after I spent a night in the E.R. and a few days in agony.

He was eating almonds. I told him eating certain nuts, especially peanuts and almonds can cause kidney stones. Within weeks he was in the hospital with kidney stones.
We both ate almonds and peanuts for snacks every day.

Some people are more susceptible than others. Other factors such as: dehydration and high calcium levels can contribute also.

I spent over three decades in the military and have had some pretty painful injuries and nine surgeries.

I had no idea what pain was until I started having kidney stones. The ones shaped like meteors and cuckleburrs are a real treat. 😁

I gotta say, the T-rex incident was a real close second though, and was even worse than the smaller stones.
 
I’ve had it twice and it does indeed suck and takes forever to heal. I used the recommended exercises
and the best one was the twist flex thing it works.
 
Wow, thanks for the replies guys.

The first time I had it, was from falling asleep in a chair with my son on my arm. We slept like that all night and in the morning it was there. Took months to heal.

This time I got it from yanking a heavy object out of the snow at a weird angle.

I know this is typically thought to come from repetitive motion, and while I will sometimes hand bang a few hundred 16D nails a week, I've only ever been afflicted from what could be explained as a strain. The pain checks all the boxes for "Tennis elbow".

I'm wearing the arm band with the pressure point in it but honestly at work it will never stay where it is supposed to be. It will be easier to adjust in when the weather gets warm and I'm not wearing 4 layers.

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I’ve got tendinitis in both elbows , inside and out. Here’s the treatments I’ve found starting with mild to severe:
-Arm bands with hard plastic cups to anchor the tendon down
- Advil
- Shockwave treatment and physical therapy
- prescription meloxicam (NSAID)
- cortisone injection (these can cause more long term damage)
- PRP injections. This is considered one of the best treatments for tendon injuries. In Canada it’s around $500 per treatment and I’ve been told it can take up to 3 treatments to see major benefits.
- alternatively people have been self treating at home using peptides (injections), some seeing benefits. It isn’t studied and recorded as well as other treatments. Typically using BPC157 and tb500 for up to 3 months , injecting anywhere from a couple times a week to everyday.
- final solution is surgery, I’d say this is probably your final consideration as you are taking a chance making it worse , losing mobility and strength
 
This was the best arm band I found when I was using one. It allowed me to do power lineman work, and major house Reno’s I was doing at the time. It really anchors the tendon down and isn’t too bulky. The Velcro strap can be a little rough on your skin, but the whole thing stays in place quite well if you work in construction

 
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